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I was born in a city and time where and when things were described by their name in the name of realism and truth, uncoloured nouns of honesty depicting society as it was fearing nothing while no one took offence, as none was intended in the atmosphere of autocriticism and self- deprecating humour. In the countryside village peasants called my father the Greek, as there were no aliens other than us and the English man who lived down the valley. Black skins only existed on TV, and Africa was far more distant than maps ever suggested. Our Ghanaian origins were a mesmerising fable to the curious ears of those willing to imagine exotic airs, indefinite populations they had never seen. Italians were used to migrate abroad in search of dreams, though no one came to dream in Rome until, they did. First strange faces appeared for myths to become realities integrating slowly fast-forwarding thirty years to see, Filipinos housekeepers, cheaper butlers, Rumanians and Moldavians caregivers to our elders, Chinese empires beginning with restaurants and shops, Selling almost anything one could ever think of affordable to all, now expanding to own bars creating jobs, employers of impoverished locals and new arrivals. Bangladeshis taking over once-was Italian grocery cash and carries working hard, a 24/7 policy just for some. Those who don’t are found selling umbrellas on the road a minute before the storm, or taking polaroid pictures of tourists at night when the gypsies come out of nomad camps to sell, unscented roses to lovers unnaturally blue for the day is reserved, to picking pockets on public transports everybody knows, signs are put up for those who don’t. Lebanese hairdressers hiring young Italian girls, eat in Turkish kebab fast-foods buying halal ingredients in Iraqi stores. Only blacks in Rome own nothing but their shoes and reputation. Those from North African countries often deal on sidewalks for drug addicts playing instruments sitting next to dogs on Tiber bridges as they beg for one more dose. Though Egyptians mainly deal with chefs, closed in restaurant kitchens learning pizza-making skills, while Pakistanis make excellent dishwashers. Turning back to blacks Nigerians, Senegalese, Malians and many more improvise themselves as clandestine street vendors of jewels and fake bags, the latter secretly supplied by Italian mafia-like wannabes. Often spotted running away from police, packing goods in white sheets, held on their backs as they flee, leaving fallen merchandise behind them. Finally some remain unseen, straight from heart of darkness and surroundings they stay strictly on TV, passing from satiric sketches of the past to NGO adverts crying out, for help against famine, poverty and sickness, calling for action two euros a day via sms to keep, consciousness clean, as we close our eyes not to see, pretend we do not know, hiding behind words we call, politically correct not to face, take distance from reality and truth, disguise inconvenience and uncomfort with ridiculously embellished, jargon. Some exceptions obviously exist, as many manage to live outside the box, though alas and do not blame me for speaking the truth, they remain to date exceptions dear to my heart, as are all the characters of this portrait, scattered pieces of humanity, pieces of me.
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Oct 25, 2017
Oct 25, 2017 at 2:08 AM UTC
The Unpolitical Correctness of Truth
I was born in a city and time where and when things were described by their name in the name of realism and truth, uncoloured nouns of honesty depicting society as it was fearing nothing while no one took offence, as none was intended in the atmosphere of autocriticism and self- deprecating humour. In the countryside village peasants called my father the Greek, as there were no aliens other than us and the English man who lived down the valley. Black skins only existed on TV, and Africa was far more distant than maps ever suggested. Our Ghanaian origins were a mesmerising fable to the curious ears of those willing to imagine exotic airs, indefinite populations they had never seen. Italians were used to migrate abroad in search of dreams, though no one came to dream in Rome until, they did. First strange faces appeared for myths to become realities integrating slowly fast-forwarding thirty years to see, Filipinos housekeepers, cheaper butlers, Rumanians and Moldavians caregivers to our elders, Chinese empires beginning with restaurants and shops, Selling almost anything one could ever think of affordable to all, now expanding to own bars creating jobs, employers of impoverished locals and new arrivals. Bangladeshis taking over once-was Italian grocery cash and carries working hard, a 24/7 policy just for some. Those who don’t are found selling umbrellas on the road a minute before the storm, or taking polaroid pictures of tourists at night when the gypsies come out of nomad camps to sell, unscented roses to lovers unnaturally blue for the day is reserved, to picking pockets on public transports everybody knows, signs are put up for those who don’t. Lebanese hairdressers hiring young Italian girls, eat in Turkish kebab fast-foods buying halal ingredients in Iraqi stores. Only blacks in Rome own nothing but their shoes and reputation. Those from North African countries often deal on sidewalks for drug addicts playing instruments sitting next to dogs on Tiber bridges as they beg for one more dose. Though Egyptians mainly deal with chefs, closed in restaurant kitchens learning pizza-making skills, while Pakistanis make excellent dishwashers. Turning back to blacks Nigerians, Senegalese, Malians and many more improvise themselves as clandestine street vendors of jewels and fake bags, the latter secretly supplied by Italian mafia-like wannabes. Often spotted running away from police, packing goods in white sheets, held on their backs as they flee, leaving fallen merchandise behind them. Finally some remain unseen, straight from heart of darkness and surroundings they stay strictly on TV, passing from satiric sketches of the past to NGO adverts crying out, for help against famine, poverty and sickness, calling for action two euros a day via sms to keep, consciousness clean, as we close our eyes not to see, pretend we do not know, hiding behind words we call, politically correct not to face, take distance from reality and truth, disguise inconvenience and uncomfort with ridiculously embellished, jargon. Some exceptions obviously exist, as many manage to live outside the box, though alas and do not blame me for speaking the truth, they remain to date exceptions dear to my heart, as are all the characters of this portrait, scattered pieces of humanity, pieces of me.
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Oct 25, 2017
Oct 25, 2017 at 2:08 AM UTC
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